NewsKentucky man fakes death to dodge payments, now faces prison

Kentucky man fakes death to dodge payments, now faces prison

He was ordered to pay 100,000 dollars in alimony. He preferred to "die" rather than pay.
He was ordered to pay 100,000 dollars in alimony. He preferred to "die" rather than pay.
Images source: © grayson county detention center

25 August 2024 10:28

An American from Kentucky faked his own death to avoid paying child support. He will spend the next few years in prison.

"Deadbeats" - this is a colloquial, derogatory term for people who dodge contributing to the maintenance of their own children. They employ various tricks to avoid this, from getting paid "under the table" to not showing income or showing it minimally to ignoring their child support obligations. Some flee the country. An American from Kentucky took it to unprecedented lengths. The man had no intention of paying his children a penny, so... he faked his own death.

Jesse Kipf executed one of the most absurd hacking attacks in the USA and maybe even in the world. The man owed his ex-wife $100,000, roughly $137,000 in Canadian dollars. However, he had no intention of contributing to the upkeep of their children. Instead, he registered himself as deceased, hacked into death registry systems, and sold access to them (along with sensitive data of others) on the darknet. The man was caught and charged with computer fraud and identity theft.

He faked his own death. He has to pay a gigantic sum

39-year-old Jesse Kipf, at the beginning of 2023, impersonated a doctor and filed a false statement of his death. He entered the data into the state government's deceased registry in Hawaii—all to avoid financial responsibility and pay his ex-wife $100,000 in child support. "Kipf then completed a State of Hawaii Death Certificate Worksheet, assigned himself as the medical certifier for the case and certified his death, using the digital signature of the doctor. This resulted in Kipf being registered as a deceased person in many government databases. Kipf admitted that he faked his own death, in part, to avoid his outstanding child support obligations," explained prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Somerset, Kentucky.

Jesse Kipf was eventually caught and faced seven years in prison. Ultimately, District Judge Robert Wier sentenced the man to six years and eight months in prison. According to Kentucky law, Kipf must serve 85% of his sentence, after which he may receive parole. At that point, he will be under probation for three years.

Kipf's debts were estimated at $196,000, or about $269,000 in Canadian dollars, for unpaid child support and damages caused to government and corporate computer systems.

"This scheme was a cynical and destructive effort, based in part on the inexcusable goal of avoiding his child support obligations," said the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky.

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